Not that I've found. Those will come out later. There are a variety of early mock drafts and early listings but nothing detailed... and very little in agreement.

Yeah, I noticed that, too. That makes me think that 2018 might actually be a really deep draft after all: if all the experts can't seem to agree on who's the best, who gets slotted where, and what team picks what player, then maybe the first half or so of the 1st Round really is pretty equal?

That means that whoever the Sox pick will probably be an impact player...and that makes me even more giddy.

I would like to see more middle IF depth, but something tells me that the Sox are going to target pitching first--with a focus on LHP especially--and LH power bats second.

Yeah, I noticed that, too. That makes me think that 2018 might actually be a really deep draft after all: if all the experts can't seem to agree on who's the best, who gets slotted where, and what team picks what player, then maybe the first half or so of the 1st Round really is pretty equal?

That means that whoever the Sox pick will probably be an impact player...and that makes me even more giddy.

I would like to see more middle IF depth, but something tells me that the Sox are going to target pitching first--with a focus on LHP especially--and LH power bats second.

All reviews I've seen/heard say this is a very deep draft. "Best since 2011" is what I've heard.

I would not put any stock in a mock draft today. You have an entire high school and college season to change things. These are young men whose bodies are going to mature and break down before June. One Tommy John or Torn ACL can change EVERYTHING. That said, they are a lot of fun to read and digest.

Seth Beer is still probably the most talented hitter in the draft. He is going to be all over the place in the next year because (1) He doesn't have a position and (2) he had no protection last year, which threw his numbers in a spiral.

Ultimately, if Beer bounces back, I am still fine taking him in round 1 early. Plenty of game changing 1b/DH types who didn't contribute much defensively. His Power and Eye combo are still elite elite, but we will see how his year goes. I just don't see any realistic way he slips into Round 2, barring something like him hitting .240 this year.

I would not put any stock in a mock draft today. You have an entire high school and college season to change things. These are young men whose bodies are going to mature and break down before June. One Tommy John or Torn ACL can change EVERYTHING. That said, they are a lot of fun to read and digest.

Seth Beer is still probably the most talented hitter in the draft. He is going to be all over the place in the next year because (1) He doesn't have a position and (2) he had no protection last year, which threw his numbers in a spiral.

Ultimately, if Beer bounces back, I am still fine taking him in round 1 early. Plenty of game changing 1b/DH types who didn't contribute much defensively. His Power and Eye combo are still elite elite, but we will see how his year goes. I just don't see any realistic way he slips into Round 2, barring something like him hitting .240 this year.

You just can't take a guy like Beer top 5 unless his bat projects like Griffey/Arod/Harper/Bryant/etc. And his is a clear level or two below where those guys were heading into the draft. For a team that will already fill their lineup with questionable defenders that may eventually need to move to first/DH (Burger, Collins, Eloy) it doesn't make a ton of sense. Not to mention that if they re-sign Abreu, he'll be occupying one of those spots. And if they decide to keep and extend Avi, they probably want to keep DH warm for him as his defense goes from bad to untenable as he ages.

You just can't take a guy like Beer top 5 unless his bat projects like Griffey/Arod/Harper/Bryant/etc. And his is a clear level or two below where those guys were heading into the draft. For a team that will already fill their lineup with questionable defenders that may eventually need to move to first/DH (Burger, Collins, Eloy) it doesn't make a ton of sense. Not to mention that if they re-sign Abreu, he'll be occupying one of those spots. And if they decide to keep and extend Avi, they probably want to keep DH warm for him as his defense goes from bad to untenable as he ages.

There's a team out there for Beer, but the Sox aren't it.

Beer is unique in that he doesn't have a position. I agree. He isn't unathletic, he just is not athletic enough to be an MLB OF, but he is probably an average or better 1b with an outside shot to stick in the corner.

But this is a kid who, depending on the scouting report, is a 50-60 potential contact with 65-70 potential power and 60-70 plate discipline/eye and enough speed to swipe 10 bases.

Beer did a bad job of expanding his zone during the year last year, clearly frustrated by seeing nothing all year to hit. But his bad year was still a .478 OBP and a .600+ Slugging.

I am not saying you HAVE to pick Beer, but would you draft Miguel Cabrera over Stephen Drew or Tim Beckham?

To me, if I am sitting 4, and Turang is off the board, and Beer produces more like his freshman year (lets say, .340-.500-.650).... Screw the position, I am drafting the game changing bat. Prospects are too volatile to draft position over talent, and Beer could be worth 4-5 WAR on his bat alone. Look at what Cody Bellinger did this year. Beer COULD be that level of good. He was second in the nation in walks and top 20 in the nation in OBP in a down year.

As of Today, Beer isn't a top 5 pick, but if he has a good year next year, he very well could be. That was more my point.

I'm still against drafting him in the 1st myself for the reasons stated: impact bat or no, I don't think you draft another 1B/DH when there are already two more prospects in the system, but I would be more than happy to snag him if he's still on the board in the 2nd. Where is the Sox's first 2nd round pick? Depending on where they are--and as Dome said, if Beer has a good year--I might change my mind.

Something tells me that pitching should still come first if you draft that high, though...

I'm still against drafting him in the 1st myself for the reasons stated: impact bat or no, I don't think you draft another 1B/DH when there are already two more prospects in the system, but I would be more than happy to snag him if he's still on the board in the 2nd. Where is the Sox's first 2nd round pick? Depending on where they are--and as Dome said, if Beer has a good year--I might change my mind.

Something tells me that pitching should still come first if you draft that high, though...

I don't disagree with your line of thinking, and agree, you can't take him at 5 with just another GOOD year, but a really good to great, to me, he is right back in the mix.

Beer is unique in that he doesn't have a position. I agree. He isn't unathletic, he just is not athletic enough to be an MLB OF, but he is probably an average or better 1b with an outside shot to stick in the corner.

But this is a kid who, depending on the scouting report, is a 50-60 potential contact with 65-70 potential power and 60-70 plate discipline/eye and enough speed to swipe 10 bases.

Beer did a bad job of expanding his zone during the year last year, clearly frustrated by seeing nothing all year to hit. But his bad year was still a .478 OBP and a .600+ Slugging.

I am not saying you HAVE to pick Beer, but would you draft Miguel Cabrera over Stephen Drew or Tim Beckham?

To me, if I am sitting 4, and Turang is off the board, and Beer produces more like his freshman year (lets say, .340-.500-.650).... Screw the position, I am drafting the game changing bat. Prospects are too volatile to draft position over talent, and Beer could be worth 4-5 WAR on his bat alone. Look at what Cody Bellinger did this year. Beer COULD be that level of good. He was second in the nation in walks and top 20 in the nation in OBP in a down year.

As of Today, Beer isn't a top 5 pick, but if he has a good year next year, he very well could be. That was more my point.